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technology

Cheap Web Conferencing

While reading some TechCrunch news I stubmled upon a new startup – DimDim, that provides a cheap replacement for WebEx and GoToMeeting. With prices of a good airplane ticket or two per month I see little sense in spending money on either. DimDim, however, is free for meetings with up to 20 attendees.

Don’t trust all the raving about not having to install any plugins. For sharing a desktop (my primary use of such services) you will have to install at least one. Also, the whole thing requires Flash 9 to be operational in whatever browser you’re using. If your place of work security rules block Flash – sorry, you out of luck.

The performance over cable (at my home) to cheap Verizon Business DSL (at office where I was trying to troubleshoot something really quick) was decent, the lag was noticeable but not overly annoying. We didn’t test video and audio, since phones are working pretty well so far.

Usability leaves much to be desired. Control elements aren’t always intuitive and are scattered all over the place. First time I started the meeting and tried to share a desktop I was prompted that a plugin is required, leading me to reload the browser and, obviously, killing the meeting in progress, since I was a host. Sending a meeting invite when starting a meeting takes up to 5 minutes and leaves you wondering whether it was sent at all. I usually resend the invite once the meeting starts.

Requiring to set meeting’s length up front also isn’t a good idea – I tend to select 2 hours for a 15 minute troubleshoot call. The reason for requiring to set up a meeting length is a bit beyond me – it could be optional, but not required.

On the positive side of things – the price of service. Most of my meetings require one or two participants, so I am yet to see how system will handle 20 (the limit for free account). Something tells me it won’t be so good.

DimDim also has an open source version of their software, but a brief research on their forums showed that no one so far have been able to successfully deploy it. A call for help left 4 weeks ago is still unanswered. I was unable to find any installation guides on DimDim’s web site and the list of technologies used to build the application (mySQL, Terracota, LightHTTPD, Tomcat, CherryPy, Flash and so on) suggests it won’t be easy task to deploy an open source edition. Therefore I see the OSS version as more of a marketing gimmick rather than actual useful product.

Overall impression from the service isn’t so bad. At the moment I will continue using DimDim’s free edition as there are no real alternatives for such service, as I want to avoid installing any special-purpose software such as VNC or pcAnywhere.

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technology

Portable PC? Oversized Phone? Laptop? Desktop? What!?

It looks like the manufacturers for ultramobile PCs, oversized phones and ultraportable laptops are struggling with a dilemma. They have manufacturing capability but they don’t know what to manufacture. Will there be a demand for overly smart phones? Or ultraportables? Or laptops with phone headsets? What is it they have to jump on?

Well, I have a solution for them. It’s easy. I have a solution for every one of you.

Let me build my ultra portable, over powered, uber-universal but still very personalizeable computer. Make it modular. Make it Lego blocks sticking together. Stop thinking Apple all-in-one, start thinking Microsoft one-for-all. It’s a great concept, if you only think about it.

Let me have a CPU/RAM unit/module where I can plug in a screen (24 inch when I am at home, touch-sensitive 7 inch when I am on the go, 12 inch when I am at the conference or on the plane and so on), keyboard and storage unit. Let me plug in media unit when I need to burn couple of CDs or DVDs, audio unit for high-quality audio output, external monitor or projector for presentations, beefier video for gaming and throw larger battery with that.

Make parts interchangeable – when I need to upgrade CPU everything else still works. If I need a larger screen – it’ll just stick. Replace the hard drive? No problem. New video? Just stick it in and have fun.

Need more incentive? Take hotels. Create a set up with large screen, keyboard, mouse, media bay and high-speed network. Guest just plugs in his CPU/RAM module and he’s good to go. Sell this to colleges and doctor’s offices. Sell this to rental office space owners and travelers.

We have the technology. We have the people. We have demands on the untapped markets. Let’s put it all together. This idea, as far as I remember, pops out in one form or another, every year. Just get to it!

Categories
technology

D’You Want Google With Dat?

With Google

McDonalds, move over, your days are gone. Now, instead of “Do you want fries with that” you’re supposed to ask “Do you want Google with that?”.

New times, new times…

P.S. Picture is the courtesy of TechCrunch.